By:- Dr. Muhammad
Zakria
Ijaz
We
carry a few stamps in our wallets so that if we
want to post a letter, we can stick one on and
drop it into a letterbox. We take it for granted
that the letter will reach its destination but
it is worth thinking occasionally of the complex
organization that brings this about.
To
begin with, a fleet of transport and men must
work a continued routine of clearing the boxes
and taking the letters to central sorting
offices in the principal cities, town and
villages. Every letter must be examined and put
into a bag for its particular destination. Next,
each bag must be loaded on a proper mail van,
train or aero plane, its contents being perhaps
combined somewhere on the journey with those of
bags from other sorting offices. Eventually, and
after being sorted perhaps two or three more
time at different depots on its route, it
arrives at destination. There, more sorters make
up the incoming letters into carefully arranged
bundles so that they can be taken to the
addresses by postmen, who may visit each house
or office in their round two or three times a
day or who in sparsely populated regions may use
van, bicycle, mule, boat or on foot to reach
remote places once a week or
less.
The
money that we paid for our stamp is our own
contribution to the running of this complex
organization. Not only does the post office of
our country offer an enormous variety of
services but it is also linked throughout the
world, under arrangements regulated by the
UNIVERSAL POSTAL UNION at Berne in Switzerland,
with the post offices of all other
countries.
The
stamp is a governmental receipt, for our money
and when it performs its service of indicating
correct payment it is postmarked or cancelled to
prevent further use. Before cancellation it may
be in effect a negotiable token for money and
whether cancelled or not it may be of interest
(and therefore value) to collectors but these
are not its purposes. It is important to bear
this in mind when thinking about its
design.
However,
it will be interesting to look at the various
categories of stamps. Stamps in common use for
an indefinite period is called DEFINITIVE
issues. COMMEMORATIVE stamps form
another very large group as they are issued for
famous people, events and anniversaries.
Occasionally, they continue in ordinary use for
a very long time. Of recent years a new category
of pictorial THEMATIC stamps has come
into being. This is to satisfy (and raise money
from) collectors who are increasingly interested
in arranging their stamps on the basis of themes
rather than countries.
PROVISIONAL stamps are temporary issues often
hastily prepared and usually resulting a
shortage of certain denominations or from a
change in Government currency or postal rates.
Occasionally, HALF STAMPS OR BISECTS is
authorized in times of shortage but more often
SURCHARGES of new values are made on surplus
stocks. An added inscription, which alters the
purpose but not the value, is called an
OVERPRINT. Air stamps are specifically
intended for mail traveling by air. Such mail is
also often distinguished by a blue label
(sometime called a “vignette”) and or by a
striped border on the envelope or a hand-stamped
“cachet”. When the world’s air routes were being
developed in the 1930, some countries issued
long set of Air stamps with a separate
denomination for every rate to different
destination but now-a-days one or two values
generally suffice. EXPRESS stamps, which
may be classed SPECIAL DELIVERY stamps,
are for mail on which special fee has been paid
for faster service. In this category, can also
be placed the PNEUMATIC POAT stamps used
in certain cities of Italy. REGISTRATION
stamps sometimes represent the registration fee,
on letters for which the post-office accepts
special responsibility or sometimes the total
for registration and postage. Such stamps are
used in Colombia, Greet Britain, USA, Canada.
Holland & Mexico have issued stamps for the
prepayment of insurance fees. PARCEL stamps are
used in some countries (Italy & Belgium). In
Italy they are in double format, so that one
half can be attached to a receipt for the packet
and the other half to the packet itself. In
Belgium, France & some other countries,
there are called RAILWAY stamps. These
are not necessarily regarded as postage stamps.
NEWSPAPER stamps are not always readily
distinguished being sometimes merely the
smallest denomination of a series of ordinary
stamps. The Farthing values of Malta & other
British colonies were issued for that purpose
but could be used to make up higher rates.
Sometimes, as in early Austrian examples, stamps
have been stuck on newspapers before printing so
that the newspaper itself cancels them. U.S.A,
France, Canada & Belgium have produced this
kind of stamps. POSTAGE DUE stamps are
the commonest of all the special kind. In Great
Britain, they are described as “labels” and they
are used for “internal accounting purposes” to
check the amount of money collected or underpaid
letters. As is well known, the practice is to
collect from the addressee double the amount of
any deficiency. In other countries and at other
times, the rules might differ considerable. For
example, in Greece & other countries of the
Near East it is used to be considered insulting
to prepay the postage on a letter, as it implied
that the recipient did not possess enough money
to pay on delivery!
Postage due stamp (usually inscribed “To
Pay” or the equivalent and frequently without
country-name) are also used to account for such
items as dues and poste vest ante charges. Many
countries use ordinary stamps for postage due
purposes with or without an overprint mark “T”
or “Taxes”. The Govt. Dep uses official stamps,
often as check on the amount of mail dispatched
and not as receipts for actual expenditure.
FRANK stamps are somewhat similar being
issued free to privileged persons such as armed
forces or members of the parliament. The letter
“OS” indicates “on service” or its equivalent.
Sometime these or other letter are punched
through a stamp in small holes. Private firms as
well as Govt. department adopt this practice,
primarily meant to prevent theft and the
collectors name for such stamps is “performs”.
Local stamps are issued for use on
limited routes or in limited areas and not for
international recognition. They are not
ordinarily regarded as postage stamp. Too
Late stamps are an uncommon kind. They
represent the extra charge for acceptance of
mail after normal times. Charity stamps
are sold at prices greater than the postal rates
they represent. The difference going to
nominated charities or appeal. Tax stamp,
which a rather similar, represent a compulsory
addition to the postage rates, not strictly
speaking, going to the postal service but to
some other fund such as education or new
post-office building words. The group is
particularly common on Latin America.
Telegraph stamps resemble postage stamp
& have sometime been authorized and have
frequently been used as telegraph stamps. This
practice is in Britain. Revenue or Fiscal
stamps include labels for a multiplicity of
purposes from custom dues to game shooting
licensees & from estate duties to patent
medicine taxes. Fiscal stamps have at times been
admitted for postal use. More often, postage
stamp are used fiscally and this accounts for
the extremely high denomination issued in some
British territories. A large group of stamps
still remains. Essays are trial design in
the from of drawing or print. PROOFS on
the other hand are printer trials made at
various stages in production. BOGUS
stamps are pretended to have been issued but
never were. Sometime, the country name is
fictional or that of an uninhabited island.
Postal stationery is generally understood
to embrace all envelopes, wrappers and postcards
officially issued by post office with stamp
already impressed. Such stamps are known as “non
adhesive” (or when spoilt by removal, cut outs).
There is every reason to regard them as equal in
status to adhesive postage stamps. beginning of
postal stationery is much less clear than those
of adhesive stamps. They
The
can be traced back with certainty to a New South
Walls issue of 1838 less definitely to the
so-called Caviling stationery of Sardinia in
1818 (the stamps in the case represented a Gov
tax on a private post and not an official postal
rate) and more obscurely to the private postal
wrappers issued in Paris by de villenyer in
1653, of which none are known still to exist. In
many cases, un-adhesive stamps are as similar in
design to adhesives. Sometimes, in fact they can
easily be confused with ordinary stamps that
have missed being perforated. When postage rates
are increased, an extra stamp is often added,
either an adhesive or by a second printing.
There are also Metro Marks impressed by
special office machines, which dispense with
stamp altogether.